Jas1712
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Group: Forum Members
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Hi, Im jut about to skinning some part from my motorcycle, my cuestion is that I can apply some stickers before the final coat, like the Ducati and some lines. This is a great place, congrats for the great job that you're doing.
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Hanaldo
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I think Jas may have actually meant the ProFinish carbon rather than pre-preg as he mentions using spray adhesive with it which would be totally unnecessary and even detrimental with pre-preg.
The ProFinish is a set weave carbon, which is a type of dry carbon fabric that has a binder in it to prevent the fibres from fraying as much and keeping the weave neat. It can be more accurately than regular dry carbon, so can be great for doing v-weaves in an infusion or wet lay setup.
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Furrari
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+xI think Jas may have actually meant the ProFinish carbon rather than pre-preg as he mentions using spray adhesive with it which would be totally unnecessary and even detrimental with pre-preg. The ProFinish is a set weave carbon, which is a type of dry carbon fabric that has a binder in it to prevent the fibres from fraying as much and keeping the weave neat. It can be more accurately than regular dry carbon, so can be great for doing v-weaves in an infusion or wet lay setup.
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Furrari
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Hanaldo. Hi. Yes that be an idea but the carbon/twaron is already on order. I’ve also seen some carbon finish stitched together to form a V. Anyway as I say, I’m a total novice on this subject and I think I’ve thrown myself in at the deep end, You soon learn with this method. I’ve also found a couple of small jobs as practice. New materials and working methods are fun aren’t they.
Mick
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Furrari
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I bought a set of sample weaves (7 of them) of CF. I used fusion fix to stick them to a piece of ABS andlayered them up with XCR resin mixed 3:1 by weight. Over this I layed peel ply ( white with the black lines) a layer of breather cloth ( white fluffy stuff) and a layer of vacuum ply ( the pink stuff). Vacuumed it at 80% vacuum for about 2hours and then let it set overnight.
Tried to remove all the bagging material this morning and all the samples came off with the peel ply. It’s come off giving a very smooth finish to the CF which I’m going to put more resin on to see the finish.
Anybody know why.? Had I sanded the ABS too well (600 grit),? Does the resin not stick well to ABS ? Were the gods of composites against me. Please help.
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Furrari
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Group: Awaiting Activation
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We're on our way. Layer of black base coat. Allowed to cure to a tacky finish. Pro-finish applied in a V patern. Resin coat applied over the top. Vacuum bagged and allowed to cure overnight. Unbagged with no observable problems or faults. 15mm tow sprayed with a light coat of fusion-fix and allowed to set overnight to prevent fraying. Slight undulation of the tow. Next morning, layer of resin applied to pro-finish and allowed to set to set to tacky. Tow cut down to three rows, no problems with fraying. The tow was then positioned over the joint, and a coat of resin applied. Vacuum bag etc applied and vacuumed at about 40% vacuum which although lower than I have used in the past seemed to give a good shape to everything. Allowed to cure overnight. So far so good. Unbagged the layered assembly and this is where it went wrong. The resin over the tow, not the pro-finish, looked as though it had reacted with something although it had cured OK.
I’ve sanded it back so it’s (more or less ) flat, although it took a lot more work to said the tow back than the pro-finish. What did I do wrong?
Monday I’ll put the sticker on the tow and 4? Coats of resin over the whole lot with the previous layer at the tack stage.
Anybody able to offer advise or suitable insults.?
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Furrari
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Group: Awaiting Activation
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I joined this thread as the letters on the Ducati fuel tank so closely matched what I wanted to do.
As it was the first time I’d used CF I wanted to do a part that didn’t mater if it went wrong, so I used the fuse box cover.
Sanded down to give a good keying surface. Coat of CRX black resin as a base coat. At the tack stage I applied the CF. I used pro-finish 210 gsm cut to give a V patern. A coat of CRX resin, the usual layers and vacuum bagged it at about 60% to 80% vacuum for about two hours and then left it to cure overnight. While this was curing I taped and cut some tow fabric about 5 strips wide and gave it a light spray of fussionfix adhesive so I could cut it more accurately the next day without it fraying.
Next morning I gave the area I was going to put the tow a coat of resin, waited for it to tack, cut the tow down to three rows then positioned it. Gave the strip and surrounding area a coat of resin and again vacuum bagged it all. I had a small leak I couldn’t find so I only had a 40% vacuum. This seemed to help the vacuum pump as it didn’t have to generate such a hard vacuum. After a couple of hours vacuuming I left it to cure overnight.
Next day I gave it two coats of resin, the second at the tack stage, and again left it to cure. This was perhaps the only disappointment as the resin over the tow had a very poor finish, sort of reticulated and instead of black/gold had a grey cast.
Sanded that area down, taking care that I didn’t breakthrough into the CF, and applied the sticker. Four more coats of resin, each applied at the tack stage, and left to cure overnight. It dried more or less OK, just a few minor nibs and very slight fish eyes ( don’t know where they came from). Rubbed it all down with a fine sanding sponge block until the nibs and fish eyes were removed, followed by a rub down with 1000 grit wet or dry and hand soap until all the previous sanding marks went and the surface was an overall mat finish. Final treatment was a polish using a DA with a yellow and then a black foam pad using Magures ultimate.
As a first go, it’s not bad. There are no marks on the surface but the tow is a bit disappointing. The CF twill flashes in the sun but the tow only does it at some angles and is still a naff grey at others. The sticker looks like it is floating inside the resin. Spectacular.
Was it worth all the work, effort and cost? No. It was never intended to be. It was just to gain experience working with CF in preparation for the next job. On this I think I will replace the tow with 2” CF tape.
I seem to be having a problem uploading pics, so sorry there aren’t any.
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Furrari
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Group: Awaiting Activation
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I stalled out on this, and all the other jobs after injuring my back putting up some more lighting in the composite shop ( the back of the garage).
Back to the load floor slider. All the fabric/flock sanded off. Gone for the simplest method. Cut all the consumables. Put the envelope bagging material down with the tape stuff on but didn’t remove the backing at this stage. First a layer of black resin and wait for it to go tacky. Using 200gsm twill I started from one end and draped the C/F so that it covered the line 120 mm from the centre line by about 2”. Turned the second piece of C/F over and draped this starting about 2” before the 120mm line over the rest of the cover. ( this gave it a V patern on the finished part.) Gave it a coat of resin. Put the consumables in place, striped off the tape stuff and closed the envelop. Vacuumed it for about 2 hours at 65% vacuum and left it overnight.
Next day debagged, checked for any defects especially in the overlap area. Put 5 widths of 16mm tow across, centred on the 120mm line. Put the stickers on and gave it all 4 coats of resin at the tack stage. Which is where this thread started. Let it dry overnight.
Looks good with just a few small fish eyes. Over the next few days I’ll sand it back to dead matt flat, give it a final coat, sand, polish and wax. Screw the repainted furniture on, put the panel back and rejoice.
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Jas1712
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Group: Forum Members
Posts: 6,
Visits: 69
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+xI think Jas may have actually meant the ProFinish carbon rather than pre-preg as he mentions using spray adhesive with it which would be totally unnecessary and even detrimental with pre-preg. The ProFinish is a set weave carbon, which is a type of dry carbon fabric that has a binder in it to prevent the fibres from fraying as much and keeping the weave neat. It can be more accurately than regular dry carbon, so can be great for doing v-weaves in an infusion or wet lay setup. Yes you're right I meant the pro finish oneI will get it the next week, thanks for get it clear. Cheers and good luck with your project.
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Jas1712
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Group: Forum Members
Posts: 6,
Visits: 69
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+x+xI think Jas may have actually meant the ProFinish carbon rather than pre-preg as he mentions using spray adhesive with it which would be totally unnecessary and even detrimental with pre-preg. The ProFinish is a set weave carbon, which is a type of dry carbon fabric that has a binder in it to prevent the fibres from fraying as much and keeping the weave neat. It can be more accurately than regular dry carbon, so can be great for doing v-weaves in an infusion or wet lay setup. Yes you're right I meant the pro finish oneI will get it the next week, thanks for get it clear. Cheers and good luck with your project. I knew aboya the profinish one when it was to late, i ordered the started kit and the tank required the pro finish one afortunately could save my project but   definitely I will try it in my next project
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